Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by John J. Gumperz
- Introduction
- 1 Towards an interactional perspective on prosody and a prosodic perspective on interaction
- 2 On the prosody and syntax of turn-continuations
- 3 Ending up in Ulster: prosody and turn-taking in English dialects
- 4 Affiliating and disaffiliating with continuers: prosodic aspects of recipiency
- 5 Conversational phonetics: some aspects of news receipts in everyday talk
- 6 Prosody as an activity-type distinctive cue in conversation: the case of so-called ‘astonished’ questions in repair initiation
- 7 The prosodic contextualization of moral work: an analysis of reproaches in ‘why’-formats
- 8 On rhythm in everyday German conversation: beat clashes in assessment utterances
- 9 The prosody of repetition: on quoting and mimicry
- 10 Working on young children's utterances: prosodic aspects of repetition during picture labelling
- 11 Informings and announcements in their environment: prosody within a multi-activity work setting
- Subject index
- Index of names
10 - Working on young children's utterances: prosodic aspects of repetition during picture labelling
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by John J. Gumperz
- Introduction
- 1 Towards an interactional perspective on prosody and a prosodic perspective on interaction
- 2 On the prosody and syntax of turn-continuations
- 3 Ending up in Ulster: prosody and turn-taking in English dialects
- 4 Affiliating and disaffiliating with continuers: prosodic aspects of recipiency
- 5 Conversational phonetics: some aspects of news receipts in everyday talk
- 6 Prosody as an activity-type distinctive cue in conversation: the case of so-called ‘astonished’ questions in repair initiation
- 7 The prosodic contextualization of moral work: an analysis of reproaches in ‘why’-formats
- 8 On rhythm in everyday German conversation: beat clashes in assessment utterances
- 9 The prosody of repetition: on quoting and mimicry
- 10 Working on young children's utterances: prosodic aspects of repetition during picture labelling
- 11 Informings and announcements in their environment: prosody within a multi-activity work setting
- Subject index
- Index of names
Summary
Introduction
Within that tradition of child language research that has been concerned with a characterization of the speech with which adults address young children, attention has often been drawn to the frequency with which adults reproduce the utterances of the young children with whom they are conversing. The most commonly cited kind of adult reproduction is the expansion (coined by Brown and Bellugi 1964), where adults ‘fill out’ the child's ‘telegraphic’ speech, rendering a syntactically well-formed version of what the child is perceived to have been trying to say. Somewhat less extensively documented, although still commonly mentioned in this literature, is a phenomenon whereby adults produce straight, unexpanded repetitions of the utterances of their child conversants. It is the prosodic characteristics of a subset of these repetition utterances which are the focus of analysis in this chapter.
These repetitions and other kinds of adult reproduction of children's utterances have invoked an extensive terminology and a wide range of overlapping formal definitions in the literature on ‘child directed speech’. Imitation, echo, partial imitation, recasting and modification are just some of the terms which have been used, and which have appeared (with no small degree of arbitrariness and imprecision) as coding categories in quantificational analyses of adult-child interactional data. It is notable that the structural distinctions drawn between these categories have been largely restricted to the lexico-syntactic domain: the phonetic relationships between the child's original utterance and the adult's reproduction have tended to be ignored.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Prosody in ConversationInteractional Studies, pp. 406 - 435Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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